Selina Skies

July 08, 2022 7:12 PM
“Good morning,” Selina greeted the beginners class as they made their way in. “Welcome or welcome back to Beginners Transfiguration. I am Professor Skies, and I serve as both the deputy headmistress and the transfiguration teacher here.” Even without knowing that transfiguration could be complicated and dangerous, she felt that gave a fairly clear subtext of ‘don’t mess around.’ Selina strongly suspected she had a reputation for being tough but fair, with the side of the spectrum it skewed towards depending on whether you asked a Pecari or an Aladren.

“Transfiguration is highly complex magic. Unlike other things which might go wrong in more explosive or messy ways, poor transfiguration skills tend to lead to limited results. That said, we are talking about a set of skills which - if pursued all the way to seventh year - includes vanishing things, conjuring things, and transforming your own or other people’s bodies. Therefore, it is important that you take this class seriously.

“For beginners classes, we focus on inanimate to inanimate transfigurations. Can someone tell me what that means?” she asked, open to any keen first years who had read ahead or could just work it out from the vocabulary. Though, if there weren’t any of them that felt forthcoming, this knowledge should have been very basic to the second years.

“Today, you will all be working with matchsticks. First years will be trying to turn them into toothpicks, whilst second years will be making needles. Who can tell me what makes the first year task easier?” she checked. She had heard of schools that threw first years straight into the second of those tasks - the result tended to be a room of students with matchsticks and mounting frustration by the end of the lesson. Occasionally a prodigious student would be able to affect a partial change, but it seemed like a cruel way to start them off.

“Very good,” she said, as she took various answers, pointing out the differences between the two tasks. “When we are transfiguring, it’s important to think of all aspects of our object.” She wrote a list down the left hand side of the board, with terms such as ‘material’ ‘form’ ‘function’ ‘size.’ Across the top, she wrote ‘Matchstick’ and ‘Toothpick/needle.’ “When you are in the early stages of your practise, I would recommend writing up a table like this. This will help focus your attention on what elements you need to change, and where you can conserve energy or find links between your items. You may add further rows if you have other ideas - for example, we could also find the common link that all these objects are man-made. That’s the first step.

“The second important element is visualisation. I want you all to close your eyes and picture the process of your matchstick turning into a toothpick or a needle. Especially for those doing the needle task, what changes first? Does it change shape and then material? Material and then shape? Do both processes happen simultaneously? There is no right or wrong answer, but the more complex the shift, the more ways there are of picturing what it looks like.

“Okay, eyes open. The spells will be different for each group - your homework will be to read a bit more about the different types of spell we use in transfiguration, but we’ll get to that later. First years, your incantation is dentiscalpii.” Behind her, the chalk wrote this on the board, along with a pronunciation guide. “Second years, your spell is acus.” It was a minor piece of misfortune that the first years had a much more complicated word to get their mouths around, but their task was easier in so many other ways. “For all of you, you will need a short, flicking wand motion, like this.” She demonstrated the wand movement, and both spells.

“If you get stuck, check in with a neighbour or raise your hand. It’s normal to need some time. Try to focus on one small change at a time.” She would also make her way around during the lesson, checking in on them. “You may begin.”


OOC: You can earn house points by posting here. Points will be awarded based on the quality of the writing, not how well you claim your character does - therefore a long, detailed, and realistic post of a character struggling with the spell will score more highly than a short post where the writer claims perfect results.

Posts are graded on length, relevance, creativity and realism. You may have your character answer the questions Professor Skies poses to the class, but check other people's posts first to make sure they haven't answered them. She may take more than one answer, depending on how detailed/accurate people are.

If you have any questions, please ask on the OOC or in chatzy.
Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies Beginners - matchsticks make...? 26 1 5

Nausicaa Scapetello

July 11, 2022 5:58 PM
Nausicaa was naturally early for Transfigurations class, and found a seat in the front and center of the room. As far as popular opinion went, this was the most difficult discipline to learn. As such, Nausicaa planned to master it easily. There was no reason not to, it was simply magic and followed the rules of magic. The idea that someone like herself might not completely excel was foreign to her. She had all of her material easily on hand, but not strewn about her desk. The professor would let them know what they would need and to clutter the area up early seemed absurd. Her notebook and quill were at the ready though.

Deputy-Headmistress Skies began talking and she was also their professor for the class. Her research into schools revealed that traditionally the post of Deputy-Headmaster/mistress was still a teaching post so that did not make her think less of the woman. The warnings the Professor gave sounded well rehearsed, and nothing she hadn't heard before. Magic was dangerous, wait for school, etc.

Her hand raised into the air quickly and yet properly in order to answer the professor's rather simple question. If anyone didn't know the answer, she wasn't sure that they should have made it this far. "Inanimate things are objects that are not alive. Inanimate to inanimate transfigurations describes the process of changing one non-living object into another non-living object." It seemed almost demeaning to answer such simple questions, but still she would not loose out to anyone else here.

Again she raised her hand to answer another ridiculously simple question. "The first year task is easier because there is not as much to change. That is the matchstick and the toothpick have more in common than the matchstick and the needle." That sounded terribly inane coming from her mouth, but it was the correct answer.

Nausicaa stared a bit blankly at the chart the Professor made on the front blackboard. Were there really people would couldn't identify the differences between these objects with just their minds? She closed her eyes as instructed and pictured the matchstick. She turned it into a toothpick in her mind. 'Difficult', she thought sarcastically. Her eyes opened and finally they got down to useful information. The spell word and wand motion, it was about time. She quickly and neatly jotted down the word along with a the phonetic pronunciation. The wand motion she wrote down as well with a simple diagram.

With the matchstick now in front of her, she retrieved her wand. Then with the magical tools necessary, she focused on the matchstick spoke the word and flicked her wand. "Dentiscalpii!". Despite her perfect execution, the matchstick seemed unmoved or unchanged. Very strange, did she get a defective matchstick? She glanced at her neighbor before focusing back on her own work. The chart on the blackboard caught her eye again. Rediculous, she thought. Still... she sighed and closed her eyes to recreate the mental image she'd made earlier.
2 Nausicaa Scapetello ..annoying scratching noises? A foul odor? Unpleasant smoke? 1561 0 5